I was privileged to be able to introduce Khoi Vinh and Adobe Comp during MAX 2014 Sneaks, and today Comp CC is available for download. Use Comp CC to create layouts on your iPad at the touch of a finger. Comp CC transforms natural drawing gestures into crisp graphics, and lets you send your comps to Photoshop, Illustrator or InDesign to finish on your desktop.

Richard Curtis' blog is a goldmine of Photoshop and Lightroom goodness, and he's recently been covering 3D printing, too. I'm blown away by the depth and scope of his posts, and his ability to keep producing highly informative quality content with such frequency. Add Richard's blog to your reading list.

Here it is, the 3rd pillar in our cloud strategy. Adobe Document Cloud combines a completely reimagined Acrobat with the power of e-signatures. Now you can edit, sign, send, and track documents wherever you are - across desktops, mobile, and web.

Trying to squeeze every ounce of performance out of exported CreateJS content? The key step in the performance optimization process is identifying the bottlenecks that result in poor performance. Over on the Flash Pro blog, Matt Karl from CloudKid has shared utilities and instructions to help you tune your content for better performance.

Adobe Illustrator Draw, originally only available for iPad, has just been released for iPhone. It is optimized for the larger screens (think iPhone 6 and 6 Plus), but works on any iPhone running iOS 7.1 or later. Draw on iPhone differs from Draw for iPad in only two ways, there's no stylus or Touch Slide support, and no integration with Adobe Shape CC. Other than that, Draw for iPhone provides the same intuitive and innovative vector drawing tools and controls organized in the same UI as Draw for iPad. You can download the new Draw from the iTunes App Store, and you'll find more details in this blog post